2.7. Educational Technology Amid Covid-19

Jegyzet elhelyezéséhez, kérjük, lépj be.!

As some interview informants were on their teaching practice in the times of Covid-19, how the Covid-19 pandemic affected the Hungarian public educational context will be briefly surveyed prior to the university context. The pandemic posed unprecedented challenges for the educational systems worldwide. Sudden school closures in the spring of 2020 meant that learners and teachers had to transform their traditional classroom practices, but the empirical studies reviewed so far (especially the virtual collaboration projects) proved that online education is a systematically planned form of education, where the planning process takes even the minute details into consideration. Effective digital education is not only planned but it is facilitated through an established online environment which learners and instructors are familiar with. As neither of these conditions (i.e., thorough planning and making use of an existing LMS system) were fulfilled, the international discourse calls the 2020 spring educational period the days of emergency remote teaching (ERT), signalling that transformation had to happen rapidly and under chaotic circumstances (Hodges et al., 2020).

Jegyzet elhelyezéséhez, kérjük, lépj be.!

Perhaps one of the most frequently mentioned problems around the ERT period has been that teachers needed to transform all their classes online under time pressure (see, e.g., Fekete, 2020a; Fekete & Divéki, 2022; Kóris & Pál, 2021; Jenei & Sváb, 2021). This challenge was arguably in close connection with both instructors’ lesson planning practices and technological pedagogical knowledge. It has been observed that instructors with several years of teaching experience generally invested less time in detailed lesson planning, and much of their instruction relied on their routine (Szabó, 2008; 2015). When it comes to out-of-the-routine classes, teachers in the Hungarian context tended to put more effort into crafting detailed lesson plans (Szabó, 2015), and an ERT period (would have) necessitated detailed planning. This detail-mindedness, however, has not only affected teachers’ pedagogical planning on the lesson level, but it has also affected planning and restaging entire courses in virtual environments (Fekete, 2020a).
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